New voters are swelling the rolls and threatening to upset the assumptions
of corporate pundits and polling organizations. Although Republicans
are vigorously signing up white voters in the suburbs and exurbs, it
appears the GOP is being out-organized by Democrat-led drives in Black
and Brown precincts across the nation.
According to a New York Times analysis, Democrat-affiliated
groups “have added tens of thousands of new voters to the rolls in
the swing states of Ohio and Florida, a surge that has far exceeded
the efforts of Republicans in both states.” A review of county-by-county
data shows “new registrations since January have risen 250 percent
over the same period in 2000. In comparison, new registrations have
increased just 25 percent in Republican areas. A similar pattern is
apparent in Florida: in the strongest Democratic areas, the pace of
new registration is 60 percent higher than in 2000, while it has risen
just 12 percent in the heaviest Republican areas.”
Massive voter sign-ups have overloaded registrars in many localities.
The Associated
Press national desk reports: “Clerks have hired
extra workers in West Virginia, Ohio and Colorado. Philadelphia borrowed
employees from other city agencies and started working overtime two
months earlier than the usual post-Labor Day push.”
In Georgia, Atlanta registrars say they are “working overtime,
six days a week right now." According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, “African-Americans,
who generally support Democrats, are registering in high numbers. About
32 percent of newly registered voters through June are African-American.
Overall, 26 percent of Georgia's registered voters are black.”
Alarmed by Black registration fervor, Republicans in Ohio deployed
Secretary of State J.
Kenneth Blackwell – one of their most highly
valued African American spokes-models – to erect classic Jim Crow-style
stumbling blocks in new voters’ paths, including a requirement that
voter registration cards be printed only on thick, 80-pound paper.
(How many bubbles in a bar of soap? How many pounds in your paper?)
People for the American Way, part of a coalition of 60 civil rights
organizations, protested the “unduly burdensome and costly regulation
that will slow the voter registration process, and even disenfranchise
some voters at time of unprecedented new voter registration activity
in Ohio.”
So much for the argument that Blacks need to be strategically represented
in both major political parties. (For an excellent overview of Republican
dirty tricks, see “Bullies at the Voting Booth” in the October issue
of The Progressive.)
This election cycle the Republicans have been more than matched by
the sheer weight of Democratic field work funding – although key traditional
Black constituency groups complain that they have been largely sidelined
in favor of new outfits more closely tied to party leadership and white
benefactors. Nevertheless, the cash flow has generated unprecedented
results. The New York Times writes:
“What is clear is that each side has deployed huge numbers of workers
and devoted millions of dollars to the effort. Much of it is being
directed by civil rights and community groups, as well as soft-money
organizations allied with the Democrats. One such Democratic umbrella
group, America Votes, says its constituents – labor unions, trial lawyers,
environmental groups, community organizations – will spend $300
million on registration and turnout in swing states, a sum that
dwarfs the
$150 million in public financing the two candidates together will
receive for the entire fall campaign.”
Rapidly rising registration rolls, facilitated by mountains of
money and fired by Black determination to avenge the Great Theft
of 2000,
are creating a 2004 electorate more diverse and volatile than the
arbiters of corporate news and polling are accustomed to measuring.
Pollsters
traditionally assign more weight to voters they deem “likely” to
turn out on Election Day. All signs point to a much larger, far
more angry
and determined African American electorate – which is not the kind
of opinion that white pollsters are adept at measuring.
Although an averaging of the polls generally cited by the corporate
media show Bush ahead by six points, the Zogby poll, which
we believe does a far better job of assessing minority public opinion,
puts the race much closer: a near dead-heat.
What a deeper look at the polls tells us is that, barring an “October
surprise” from either the Bush men or Osama bin Laden or disastrous
economic news, the election will turn on events in Iraq.
Iraqis hold the key
While giving Bush a “solid” lead, the Washington Post-ABC News
poll shows Bush to be vulnerable to perceptions that U.S. casualties
in
Iraq are unacceptably high. (We are talking about white perceptions,
here, since Black opinion is overwhelmingly anti-war and highly
empathetic to Iraqi deaths as well as those of Americans – a
hole in the souls of, particularly, white males. Latino opinion
lies somewhere
in between.) The Post-ABC survey found that:
”Forty-seven percent approve of the job Bush
is doing on the economy and on Iraq, with 50 percent saying they
disapprove. After two weeks
of bad news from Iraq that has included the beheadings of two
Americans, more U.S. casualties and continued bombings, a narrow
majority (51
percent to 46 percent) once again says the war was not worth
fighting. Only on his handling of terrorism does Bush receive strongly
positive
marks, with 59 percent approving and 38 percent disapproving.”
Since the Post-ABC poll does not
publish ethnic breakdowns, lopsided Black and Latino anti-war sentiment
is buried in the aggregate data. Thus, a majority of whites still
think the war in Iraq was “worth fighting,” but the negative numbers
are strong and growing.
By juxtaposing the Post-ABC poll with Rasmussen
Report tracking results, which score the race 49-45 percent in Bush’s
favor, we get a clearer window into the contradictions in (white)
American thinking:
”52% believe that finishing the mission [in Iraq] is more important
while 42% say getting the troops home should be the top priority….
These results confirm another finding that 54% of voters favor
leaving U.S.
soldiers in Iraq until that country's political
situation
is stabilized….
”As with most issues surrounding the War with
Iraq, Bush voters are united and Kerry voters are divided. One third
(31%) of Kerry voters
believe that finishing the mission in Iraq should be the top
priority. Most Kerry voters (56%) say getting troops home right away
is more
important.”
In the earlier survey, Rasmussen “found that most American voters
believe it will take a lengthy period of time for Iraq to reach political
stability. In fact, 60% of voters say it will take at least three years.”
What we are seeing is a white public opinion that is substantially
torn between the imperatives of American Manifest Destiny – the “mission” – and
agony over the deaths of “our boys and girls” in Iraq. The threshold
of acceptable pain is clearly much lower than during the Vietnam era. Steep
increases in U.S. casualties in the weeks before November 2, or even
a single event that is particularly costly to U.S. forces, would likely
cause schizophrenic white American opinion to recoil from the war and
abandon the “mission” in disgust. This should not be mistaken for empathy
with Iraqis, but an unwillingness to expend too many American lives
to “rescue” Muslims and Arabs from…other Muslims and Arabs.
The Bush Pirates are keenly aware of the volatility of the electorate
regarding Iraq, and are doing everything possible to avoid setting
a public mood swing in motion. That’s why U.S. forces have resorted
to savage aerial attacks against resistance strongholds in Iraq, postponing
infantry assaults on urban centers until after the election. That’s
also why the Bush gang keeps blaming television news for giving a false
impression of events on the ground, in a bald attempt to encourage
further media self-censorship in Iraq.
Iraqis, then, hold the U.S. election in their hands. Militarily and
politically, it is the Iraqi resistance, not American war planners
and politicians, who have the ability to decisively influence events.
Americans are not the center of the world.
The surge of new Black and Brown voters is encouraging news, and we
are all anxious to see if John Kerry can dance on top of the very narrow
table he has jumped on, during the debates. But Iraqis may have the
final word.
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